Avoid Facebook Photo Tags With These Trippy New Tees

Facebook's ability to know all things about all people is, let's face it, unsettling. When you upload a photo, it can immediately tell (based on biometrics) who it is, meaning it's got your face — and your friends' — on lockdown. What if you just threw its algorithms off a bit? Simone C. Niquille, an Amsterdam grad student with a subversive streak, is making sci-fi-worthy clothes designed to outsmart facial-recognition technology.

Niquille's REALFACE Glamouflage T-shirts — a collection of disorienting, face-covered garments designed to confuse Facebook — are simply surreal. Featuring the melting, swirling visages of Britney Spears, Michael Jackson, and Barack Obama (albeit celebrity impersonators), its "face recognition dazzle" ploy is in full effect here. The shirts are already generating a buzz on their own, but also serve as part of Niquille's larger FaceValue project, which explores how privacy, digital tracking, and the human face as a commodity might lead to disruptive-design solutions in the future. Right now, though, you can kick off your own chaotic Facebook tag game by purchasing a Glamouflage shirt for $65 on Niquille's site. And if nothing else, you can always make this an early tech trick for (online) mischief night? So meta! (Wired)

Everyone knows Google already has one of the most striking headquarters in tech. Its sprawling
Mountain View offices are home to dozens of restaurants, climbing walls, bocce
ball courts, nap pods — we could really go on all day. But now, hot on
the heels of another big-time tech makeover, Google's primary-colored campus read

It's no secret that Americans aren't great at math. In fact, a recent report puts U.S. millennials' math scores in last place compared to 21 other countries. So, we welcome the latest release of a new math problem-solving app. Called PhotoMath, the app will solve math problems in pictures you take. Simply take a read